As a new mason, there was a lot to be learned about anti-masonry in this book. A lot of details, but only around 4 or 5 real arguments and criticisms. The book seemed to more or less focus on Pike and Taxil, and rebut different authors who criticize the craft using their writings. In short, if you've read the first quarter of the book, you've pretty much read the whole thing.
Being a conservative Christian and a Freemason is quite a challenge in the 21st century. Masonic lodges do not enjoy the widespread popularity of a few decades ago, and conservative Christian church leaders are highly suspicious of what they don't understand. The temptation is strong to yield to the many vicious rumors that are circulating. This book provides a much-needed resource to counter the most popular of them. As I read through the pages, I found defenses and explanations for the unfounded attacks I've read and heard. Often it's best just to let folks believe what they will, but if you'd like a resource to debunk the misinformation, this book will help. This title, and another one, "A Pilgrim's Path" by John Robinson, are the only two volumes of which I'm aware that meet the falsehoods head-on.
There has to be more about anti-Masonry than mis-readings of Pike. Doesn't there?
I was pretty excited about this book, and to boot I got it used for a song off the web. Meh. There is definitely some engaging material here, and certainly I learned some things about anti-Masonry (and necessarily, about Masonry itself, I suppose, in the process...I guess?). I have to admit that several times throughout, I found myself thinking, "This could have been condensed." There were also some editing issues that made me suck my teeth. BUT, overall I suppose I enjoyed the book more as I went further along into it. The tone of the early few chapters I can, unfortunately, only describe as occasionally petulant. But the authors do find their stride in later chapters.
Perhaps a future revision could dissolve and reconstitute most of the Taxil-based shenanigans and the mis-readings of Pike into one chapter.
Overall, I have to say that I enjoyed Robinson's A Pilgrim's Path more than this book. Robinson stays outside of the line of fire, while Morris and de Hoyos maybe live a little bit too close to this stuff.
This is an awesome book. As members of the Craft we are taught to bear with patience attacks from anti-Masons, but brothers de Hoyos and Morris do an excellent job of explaining the motivations of those who attack Freemasonry. The reader is shown that much of the time the motivation is money.